Abstract

Ceramic membranes made of garnet Li7Zr3La2O12 (LLZO) are promising separators for lithium metal batteries because they are chemically stable to lithium metal and can resist the growth of lithium dendrites. Free-standing garnet separators can be produced on a large scale using tape casting and sintering slurries containing LLZO powder, but the quality of the separators is severely compromized by the protonation of the moisture-sensitive LLZO during processing and the irreversible loss of lithium during sintering. In this work, an approach is presented to mitigate the degradation of the LLZO and produce high quality separators using Li2CO3 as a source of excess lithium. By systematically investigating the effects of Li2CO3 addition during the different steps of the tape casting process and the intricate relationship between the protonation and relithiation of LLZO phase, the formation of highly protonated LLZO during ball milling was identified as the most critical step. It was shown that the addition of minimal amounts of Li2CO3 during wet milling effectively suppresses LLZO protonation and ensure the effectiveness of relithiation during subsequent sintering. Using this modified method, flat LLZO separators with a relative density of 95.3% were prepared in a simplified process with a significantly reduced excess lithium of only 5 mol% with respect to the stoichiometric LLZO, exhibiting an ionic conductivity of 0.18 mS cm−1 at room temperature and a critical current density of 1 mA cm−2 at 60°C for lithium stripping/plating.

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